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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 52, No. 9, May 24, 2010. Page 23-23.

Abstract: North Sea Chalk: 40 Years of Production at Ekofisk Field From a Rock Some Said Would Never Flow Oil

Charles T. Feazel
Subsurface Technology, ConocoPhillips Currently: Feazel GeoConsulting LLC

Chalk is deposited by pelagic settling of algal and foraminiferal skeletons which are subsequentlymodified by re-sedimentation in slumps, debris flows, and turbidites. Chalk is an improbable reservoir rock characterized by high porosity (25-45%) but low matrix permeability (typically

Ekofisk, a world-class giant oil and gas field in the Norwegian North Sea, is approaching 40 years of production from the chalk and has many years of economic life remaining. Technological advances – including 3D and 4D seismic, the world’s largest offshore waterflood, monitoring and mitigating reservoir compaction and sea-floor subsidence, and creative design and geosteering of long-reach and multi-lateral wells – have extended field life, increased ultimate recovery, and restored daily production to rates not seen since the 1970s.

Ongoing studies by the license partners facilitate Previous HiteffectiveTop management of the chalk reservoir and aid in planning new wells in a field containing greater than 300 existing wellbores, over 400 mapped faults, an expanding waterflood, a dynamically deforming overburden, and a challenging matrix which many geoscientists and engineers initially dismissed as non-productive.

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